Subscribe to this blog

Get Email Updates!

Search This Blog

"A nation can survive its fools, and even the ambitious. But it cannot survive treason from within. An enemy at the gates is less formidable, for he is known and carries his banner openly. He rots the soul of a nation, he works secretly and unknown in the night to undermine the pillars of the city, he infects the body politic so that it can no longer resist. A murderer is less to fear. The traitor is the plague." -Cicero

MARILYNN MONROE MARRIED A COMMUNIST AND WAS 'WITHIN THE COMMUNIST ORBIT'

Being watched: Marilyn Monroe and her husband, playwright Arthur Miller were both suspected of communist activities by the FBI

Husband Arthur Miller was no doubt a card carrying communist. With this fact alone, we have to ask ourselves why Monroe was obsessed with JFK ? Hollywood ties to Communism then, like today, are profound. It was Communists that established the Actors Screen Guild. Listen for the communist infested media right now to use Alinksy tactics of ridicule when anyone speaks of Monroe or anyone in Hollywood or anywhere in America as a Communist. Some 50-odd years later, we can see all that communism has accomplished. Much of that accomplishment now lies at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue. Another large dose in the major media and blanketed largely by our Universities. Last note, you gotta love the story the FBI is selling about how they have "lost" other Marilyn Monroe files. Okay. We are all buying that bull aren't we? - W.E.

A classified file released by the FBI shows how the agency tracked Marilyn Monroe's suspected ties to communism in 1956.

The
agency documented an anonymous phone call to the New York Daily News
that year warning that playwright Arthur Miller was a communist and
Monroe had 'drifted into the communist orbit' after her marriage to him
earlier that year.

The file is just one piece of the puzzle about what the FBI knew about the actress when she died in August 1962.

The
Associated Press waging an ongoing campaign to have more of the FBI
documents released by the agency, coinciding with the 50th anniversary
Monroe's death.

The redacted document reveals that on
July 11, 1956, the agency got a tip that an anonymous male caller phoned
the Daily News to report that the actress's company, Marilyn Monroe
Productions, was 'filled with communists' and that money from the
company was being used to finance communist activities.The caller said Miller's marriage to Monroe during a Jewish ceremony less than a months earlier was a 'coverup.' Miller, the man said, 'was still a member of the CP (communist party) and was their cultural front man.'The FBI has long made portions of its documents about Monroe public, but most of them are heavily redacted.

Surveillance: This FBI file documented an
anonymous call to the New York Daily News. It's unknown how the agency
found out about it

However, the FBI claims it has lost its files on the actress and cannot release them.Finding
out precisely when the records were moved - as the FBI says has
happened - required the filing of yet another, still-pending Freedom of
Information Act request.The
most recent version of the files is publicly available on the bureau's
website, The Vault, which periodically posts FBI records on celebrities,
government officials, spies and criminals.The
AP appealed the FBI's continued censorship of its Monroe files, noting
the agency has not given 'any legal or factual analysis of the
foreseeable harm that might result from the release of the full
records.'

Marilyn Monroe is seen here with Jean Pierre
Piquet, manager of Continental Hilton Hotel. The FBI has released a new
version of files it kept on Monroe that reveal the names of some of her
acquaintances who had drawn concern from the FBI

The star's death was ruled likely drug overdose, but questions still remain about the FBI's role in her life

Monroe's star power and fears
she might be recruited by the Communist Party during the tenure of
longtime FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover led to reports being taken on her
activities and relationships, including her marriage to playwright
Arthur Miller.Monroe's file
begins in 1955 and mostly focuses on her travels and associations,
searching for signs of leftist views and possible ties to communism. The
file continues up until the months before her death, and also includes
several news stories and references to Norman Mailer's biography of the
actress, which focused on questions about whether Monroe was killed by
the government.There have
been two major government investigations into Monroe's demise - the
original inquiry immediately after her death and another effort by the
Los Angeles District Attorney's Office in 1982. The second inquiry,
released in December 1982, reviewed all files available investigative
reports, including files compiled by the FBI on her death. The records,
the DA's office noted, were 'heavily censored.'That
mention intrigued the man who performed Monroe's autopsy, Dr. Thomas
Noguchi. While the DA investigation concluded he conducted a thorough
autopsy, Noguchi has conceded that no one will likely ever know all the
details of Monroe's death. The FBI files and confidential interviews
conducted with the actress' friends that have never been made public
might help, he wrote in his 1983 memoir 'Coroner.''On
the basis of my own involvement in the case, beginning with the
autopsy, I would call Monroe's suicide "very probable,"' Noguchi wrote.
'But I also believe that until the complete FBI files are made public
and the notes and interviews of the suicide panel released, controversy
will continue to swirl around her death.'